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Show 4 tfnmf to m THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH V YOUTH PAYS HOMAGE TO HERO ABORTING COWS POOR PRODUCERS Avne! M" melaii MRilatiag Owe rfulnm Reduction Expected One to wetnwr From Hintrai Mcrphcw 0iu. NotHawm Three-Fourth- s. Ml There Is no definite measure of the decrease that the cow Is likely to experience afier she has nhoried, hut our observation has taught us that nmst heifers that abort while carry lug their first calf, if they abort at five months or so, will usually not milk more than to of what they will normally produce after a good fitting and a nor mill calving. If they abort at seven months or nearer the normal calving period they will milk a considerably greater quantity hut not often more than half the production they would normally produce. Cows that h(ive calved normally once or twice and that do not abort too early wifi often milk within 15 or 20 per cent of their normal pro duction. Our observation has been that the decrease In production upon the time that the abort Ing takes place and the nge of the cow or the number of previous ealv- tugs. writes Dr. George H. Corn of Stephenson county, Illinois. In the Iralrle Farmer. We have had cows under our care that at mature age following an abortion produced 11 KX' pounds of milk In twelve months, and the first year following a normal calv ing (the normal calving taking place within fifteen months after the pre vlous abortion) the same animal produced over 25.000 pounds of milk Several animals from a herd under our care nearly doubled their production after they had recovered from abortion disease. Under ordinary conditions abortion dlsense In the dairy herd can he expected to reduce the milk yield In aborting cows from of what to the normal reduction would he following the birth of a healthy calf Mnny authorities figure the average loss per cow due to abortion dlsense In those herds that are affected at 25 per cow. but in our experience we believe that nearer twice this amount, under present methods of operating the pure-bredairy herd, would be nearer correct. herd owner will oe The pure-bremore likely to put forth a vigorous effort to eliminate abortion disease from his herd when once he figures definitely what this disease Is costing him. The cost can very easily be determined from the decreased production from that which he could nor mally expect from his herd and th loss of the calves which is due to abortion disease. In many pure-hreherds where offspring is sold at high prices this loss will sometimes amount to several thousand dollars pc year In such herds as this large sums of money can be profitably spent If nec essary to eliminate the disease from the herd. one-fourt- A Cossi Worlds Best Fed Into the Red Furnace To this generation everywhere in the world ttie Eleventh Hay of November will always be a Day of Days. This is tlie eleventh anniversary ol the Armistice that ended the greatest and most terrible, the most hateful and the nmst fateful of all wars. In the greater nations ot the earth it will tie marked by the roar of ceremonial guns, by the assembling ot great crowds and among the more thought ful by earnest searchings of tiie heart. There is no day In the calendar like this. Eleven years ago the guns ceased so suddenly that ttie world could not believe t he hour of its deliverance had indeed come. The Americans had fought a slow and terrible way through the Argonne, across the Meuse and were deep In the Woevre plain. The French had all hut cleared their soil of the last Invader. The British were back at the smoking coal pits of Mons, and far down the Sombre they were sweeping through the lost towns of Belgium. Twilight of the Gods. Austria had gone down In the smoke of supreme disaster. The Hupsburgs bad pnssed Into the shadows and the dust of history. In Berlin, soldiers were throwing away their iron crosses and the naval mutineers were flying the red flag at Kiel. The Twl light of the Gods was falling upon the LudendnrfTs and Von Moltkes. German emissaries had gone under a flag of truce to the forest of Compiegne The wheel had swung full circle. It was time for the Great Accounting, for the reckoning of crimes and the fixing of punishments: The God alone Remember everlastingly; they strike Remoiselessl.v and ever like for like. By their great memories the Gods are known. And the world waited for the word from the woods of northern France, where Foch faced Von Gundell across a nurrow table and a new chapter ot history was opening There, eleven yeas ago, while the murmur of fight ing and the flicker of gunflre still ran from the North sea to the plains of Alsace, the remaking of the world map was begun. Problems Still to Solve. It still proceeds, less swiftly than in the forest of Compiegne or around the peace table of Versailles. Ttie forces loosed both by the war and by ttie peace have yet to run their courses. Nor have all the gains and losses of the war been assessed. Ttie gains were Incalculable, but eleven years after only few of them are Anally and securely won. We st ill are wrestling with the problems of disarmament and with the hideous legacy of wartime passions. The greatest losses fell upon the Country of the Voung. The flower of humanity, the strongest, the most spirited, the hope of their generation, had marched by the millions Into the Red Furnace. The young poet left his songs unsung, the young artist his pictures unpainted, the youthful builder his buildings unbuilt- - They Joined that gallant procession that now marches only along the roads of Memory, and the world is poor indeed without them. Armistice day belongs both to the and the Dead, it is a yearly testimonial to all the fallen, whether it Is celebrated at the tomb of the Un known Soldier, at the cenotaphs, the battle gates or the arches of triumph or in some quiet country place far from the flags and the music of ceremony. The crowds and the solemn processions hear annunl witness that these dead have not died altogether In vain and that their memory will en dure so long as men set honor and courage above ease and contentment. For the living it is a reminder that war has not forever gone and that its madness lurks deep in the race. This and the lessons of duty, of devotion of and of discipline are the supreme lessons of the struggle that ended eleven years ago today On this and on eery Eleventh of November, despite the disillusions and despairs of Peace, humanity can look back to that cold, gray autumn tnorn lng of 11118 and remind itself that once, at least, it touched the very peaks of human greatness. Quick e LESSON OF WAR MTbt these deed ebei) New York World oot have died in vein. Eleven Years of Peace Sees Dawn of New Day In Arlington National cemetery where the Memorial amphithentet erected to all American war dead stands, the words Lincoln used at Gettysburg long ago are carved to pledge that spirit of the nation against aggressive war. We hpre highly resolve that these dead shall not have died In vain. If was the rebirth of the nation, the coming of a new day when America should agnin stand forth In the world as one people under one flag, with na tlonal aspirations of peace and hap plnesg rewelded In the fiery ordeal of civil war. that Lincoln saw as be spoke. Decades Inter. In 15)21. when the great, open, airy temple of patriotism at Arlington was rededicated at the burial within Its sanctuary of Americas Unknown from France, another President was to call similarly upon the gathered great men of many na lions, come to frame the naval limitations pact There must be, there shall be, the commanding voice of a conscious civilization against armed warfare, President Harding said. And eleven years after the World war ended, years filled with clashes of conflicting opinion at home and abroad, years when the nerves of governments and peoples have been tried sorely In the bitter aftermath of war, who shall say America has failed to keep her pledge to her dead? National Iron Crosses and Beer for Signal Boys Eleven oclock, November 11, 15)18, which brought Joy and thanksgiving to large numbers of the A. E. Fwns merely another one of those days to the gallaDt members of B company. Three Hundred and First Field Signal battalion, once of the Seventy-sixtdivision, who were winning the war by keeping open communication by telephone between French points of command and detachments of negro infantry, C. C. Rodenbach recalls writing in the Chicago Dally News. The order came over the wires the night before to spread the good news that the war was officially over at eleven oclock the next morning. But these same signal choristers had been fooled once before on such reports of peace. Back some time in October there was a rumor of armistices. But the rumors had never reached the Germans, for they treacherously let loose a flock of shells when all of the switchboarders not on duty were on their way down the hill for beer. Stop for Vin Blanc. This order, however, was authentic. At eleven oclock the dally interchange of desultory firing ceased. There was no switching to do. Rnd the boys went dwn one hill and over another to ward the late foemaD and his souvenirs. Inasmuch as the gallant soldiery had not discharged Its revolvers at the foe befo:e the armistice, It was considered advisable to hold target practice after the armistice. The choristers selected a tree as a target Nobody hit a tree, but somebody alIt made him most hit a lieutenant very angry, indeed. Didnt anybody tell you, he asked, that there was to be no more firing after eleven oclock? I could have you court martialed for this. Yes. sir, said the choristers, and continued toward the foeman less Jauntily. The foeman was opening a large keg of black bper at the time the signal boys showed up. The collar on the brew was very tall and frothy, and was described by the barkeep as "eeln thloago koller." pro-teAfter a few seldls. the barter for son America may have venlrs began. won the war. but Germany got back o most of its reparations on its venlrs. Iron crosses.- which had been Issued the troops along with the ra Hons, were still wrapped In their tissue paper, and changed into American possession for SO francs apiece and that was when a franc was 8 franc. Get Souvenirs and Beer. The signal hoys got all the souvenirs they could buy or barter, and all the beer they could hold, and were about to start hack, when an Important-looking automobile bounded Into view. Out of it came a fat. red faced colonel, of the same shape, but not the same temper as Santa Claus. What are yon men doing here? Dont you demanded the colonel. know there Is to be no fraternizing with the enemy? Dont you know I could have you court martialed for this? Yes, sir," said the choristers, and made off toward home, leaving to the colonel and his staff what remained of rhe Iron crosses and the beer. A cry in the night may be the first warning that Baby has colic. No cause for alarm if Castoria is handy I This pure vegetable preparation brings quick comfort, and can never do the slightest harm. Always keep a bottle in the house. It is the safe and sensible thing when children are ailing. Whether its the stomach, or the little bowels; colic or constipation; or diarrhea. When tiny tongues are coated, or the breath is bad. Whenever theres need of gentle Children love the regulation. one-thir- d fnif. pg three-fourth- one-fourt- h m They have no pact to aits sur faithful dead. Theirs is a deeper pledge, unseen, unheard, Sealed la the dark, unwritten, sealed with red; And they wiO keep tbeir word PQK B They have no But If, O With dreadful Our dead pvon Jars of Water in Piano of . hot To counteract the effects dry air upon his pluno during the winter, EX J. Dialer, expert tuner of Tiffin, Ohio, has had success in placing six 'ruit Jars, filled with water, inside the cabinet of the upright. He is careful to keep the containers filled and to adjust them so that they will not touch strlngt or sounding board. The Jars are removed In the An Ideal temperature for a spring. piano would be about 65 degrees Mr. the year around. Fahrenheit Dialer declared. Popular Mechanics Magazine. Fwtr-sw- w taste of Castoria, and its mildness makes it suitable for the tiniest infant, and for frequent use. And a more liberal dose of Castoria is always better for growing children than some needlessly strong medicine meant only for adult use. Genuine Castoria always has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. Proscribed by doctors I Family pride Is a great aid to Cultivate It. pact to sign our happy dead. God, tf WE should sign tn vain, eyes, out of each narrow bed, will rise again. New York Ttansa. de- cency. GLY Oj IMPIESH N&taras warnings hdpnatureelear your complexion and ralnt red rosas 1 In your pala, tallow charts. Truly wonderful resu!tj follow thorough ' eolon NR cleaning. Take f NATURE'S NEMCOV to regulato i J and strengthen your alimtnati veer J cans. Watch the transformation. Try NR in lead of mere laxative, KiU, mI, pml, ,1 Irtfii,!,. 2Ss FKKL LIKE A MILLION, TAKE ' fcDlTOrNICHT 1 SMTOMORROW ALRIGHT True to Form She certainly keeps tabs on her An Inch of smile is better thu a husband." Yes, shes a regular .auby." yard of frown. s d ppm nimu d d Alfalfa Hay Excellent To Identify Genuine Aspirin increasing use of Bayer Aspirin every year is proof it has no ill effects. It is the accepted antidote for pain. It always helps; it never harms. Quick relief when youve a headache, or cold; or are suffering from neuralgia or neuritis. Rheumatic pains yield, too, if youll cnly give these tablet a chance. But you want genuine Aspirin, so look for the Bayer Cross on every tablet, The box always bears the name Bayer and the word genuine' printed in red. Proven directions inside. TEE of Bayer Mannfactore ot SallcyUcad Aspirin la the trade mark Monoaoetlcaeldester Source of Mineral Lime Alfalfa hay stands supreme as a source of that Important mineral, lime. cow producing 30 A d pounds of milk daiiy requires a little over four ounces of lime dally for maintenance and milk production. Ten pounds of alfalfa hay alone will supply over three ounces of this require ment, and other feeds tn the ration will ordinarily supply the balance Where dairymen feed liberally of al falfa hay, the problem of supplying sufficient available calcium is very slight. All other minerals are abund antly provided with liberal feeding. ot taAAaaaiA u 1,000-poun- Petrified Tongue Found Bigger Thrill "I came tonight especially to find out If you cared enough to marry me. Is that all I thought you were going to take me to the movies." Passing Show. lowu paleontologists are endeuvor. Ing to Identify seven petrified tongues found In a gravel pit. It is tlronghl they are buffalo tongues cached by Is life a Journey to some, a tread- Marriage Is a lottery Id which the prize winners draw allmonv mill to others? Indians. Dairy Hints Dehorn the young calf with caustic, The dry stover, oat othy hay. gume hay see roughages such as corn and wheat straw and timare less valuable than lefor milk production. Silage's chief value Is Its succulence. One should avoid feeding too much of It, since It Is bulky and contains a low percentage of digestible nutrients. When a calf Is thriftless or shows symptoms of rickets, give It two to r oil twice four tensponnfuls of dally according to age, size and severity of symptoms. Backache Bother You? Persistent Backache Often Warns of Sluggish Kidneys. A cod-live- Cull out the poorer cows, give the better ones a liberal supply of the proper feeds and watch the cream hold Its own, even gaining In Instances. check Water, and lots of It, Is very Important In dairy cattle feeding. Cows In milk should have water twice dally, and It should not be lee cold. It pays to put a beater In the water tank If it Is outside in freezing temperature. When skim milk-fecalves tend to scour and blood meal does not prove remedial, add one ounce of lime water to each pint of milk fed dally, or one teaspoonful of a mixture of ounce of formalin and fifteen and f ounces of bollpd water to be kept in an amber colored bottle. d one-hal- They have no pact to tgoouf quiet dead. Whose eyes In that eternal peace are drowned. Age doubts and wakes, and asks if night ha fled But youth sleeps sound. . - THE PACT By Alfred Noyes n out peaceful dead. They have no pad to Pacta are for trembling hands and beads raws Ten million graves record what youth has said. y And cannot now g . hCirful snd s Among the first to observe Armistice day in Washington were the Boy Scouts of America, who Journeyed to Arlington where they paid a colorful tribute to Americas Unknown Soldier. wt figge- -. one-hal- f every day find you lame and achy DOES nagging backache, headache and dizzy spells? Are kidney excretions tod frequent, scanty or burning in passage? These are often signs of sluggish kidneys and should not be neglected. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes, use Doans Pills. Endorsed the world over. Sold by good dealers everywhere. Mr. 50,000 Users Endorse Doans: !! 1 iefy 2015 S Stmt, Sacramanto, Cllf. ? o nervous. mteful to Doan's Pills. 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